11 World's Most Expensive Watches

While most of us could never dream of owning a watch that’s valued over a million dollars, there is in fact an entire market of timepieces that carry a 7-figure price tag. Sure a million dollars gets you a beautiful house pretty much anywhere in the country, but it will also get you one of the most expensive watches to ever hit the market. At first, investing that much money into a watch may seem like an utter waste of cash, but it’s far from it. Watches like this are more than fashion statements – they are assets. These wrist pieces are more complicated than most care to know, and they will continue to appreciate in value over time.Here Is List Of 11 World's Most Expensive Watches

11. MB&F HM4 Final Edition $230,000


10. Bulgari Magsonic Sonnerie Tourbillon watch $620,000.



Caseback view of the Bulgari Magsonic Sonnerie Tourbillon watch.



9. Maitres du Temps Chapter One Round Transparence $540,000


8. Christophe Claret DualTow Night Eagle $595,000


7. George Daniel Co-Axial Chronograph $619,000


6. Chopard L.U.C Tourbillon Baguette $240,000


5. Audemars Piguet Royal Oak Grand Complication $741,600


4. Jean Dunand Shabaka $500,000


3. Franck Muller Aeternitas Mega 4 $2,400,000


2. Patek Philippe 5004T $3,985,000


1.  LOUIS MOINET METEORIS Tourbillon Rosetta Stone $4,500,000


The Tourbillon Rosetta Stone dial features a hand-crafted fragment of the extremely rare Sahara 99555, an authentic meteorite that fell to Earth and which could hail from the planet Mercury. Geological experts have used ultra-precise measurement techniques that suggest this rock is 4.6 billion years old – only a million years younger than the accepted minimum age of the Solar System and as such, the Sahara 99555 meteorite has been dubbed the ‘Rosetta Stone’ for early Solar System chronology. Its greenish-grey colour throws into stark relief the central golden hour and minute hands as well as the main spring and tourbillon escapement that are revealed by the dazzling open-work dial architecture. The escapement at 6 o’clock is mounted in a rotating tourbillon cage that helps to maximise timekeeping precision by averaging the effects of positional variations caused by gravity, while the state of wind revealed by the visible main spring at 12 o’clock provides an organic indication of the available power. The exceptional case of this Meteoris Tourbillon comprises 50 components including the signature Louis Moinet crown guard and the display-back is just as spectacular as the dial-side, with the ‘octopus spring’ of the winding and setting mechanism taking centre stage.


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